TypeScript 6.0 is a transition release bridging 5.9 and the forthcoming 7.0 (a native Go port). Most changes are new defaults and deprecations preparing for 7.0. Here is what you need to do:
Most projects need these tsconfig changes:
TypeScript 6.0 is a transition release bridging 5.9 and the forthcoming 7.0 (a native Go port). Most changes are new defaults and deprecations preparing for 7.0. Here is what you need to do:
Most projects need these tsconfig changes:
Specifically from Rakuten TV (live.tv.rakuten.co.jp)
FMI: https://cdm-project.com/How-To/ & https://old.reddit.com/r/Piracy/comments/y30ffr/
| #include "stdafx.h" | |
| #include <Windows64\4JLibs\inc\4J_Input.h> | |
| #include <Common\App_enums.h> | |
| #include <Windows.h> | |
| C_4JInput InputManager; | |
| void C_4JInput::Initialise(int iInputStateC, unsigned char ucMapC, unsigned char ucActionC, unsigned char ucMenuActionC) |
Companion prompts for the video: OpenClaw after 50 days: 20 real workflows (honest review)
These are the actual prompts I use for each use case shown in the video. Copy-paste them into your agent and adjust for your setup. Most will work as-is or the agent will ask you clarifying questions.
Each prompt describes the intent clearly enough that the agent can figure out the implementation details. You don't need to hand-hold it through every step.
My setup: OpenClaw running on a VPS, Discord as primary interface (separate channels per workflow), Obsidian for notes (markdown-first), Coolify for self-hosted services.
Verification-Driven Development (VDD) is a high-integrity software engineering framework designed to eliminate "code slop" and logic gaps through a generative adversarial loop. Unlike traditional development cycles that rely on passive code reviews, VDD utilizes a specialized multi-model orchestration where a Builder AI and an Adversarial AI are placed in a high-friction feedback loop, mediated by a human developer and a granular tracking system.
| """ | |
| The most atomic way to train and run inference for a GPT in pure, dependency-free Python. | |
| This file is the complete algorithm. | |
| Everything else is just efficiency. | |
| @karpathy | |
| """ | |
| import os # os.path.exists | |
| import math # math.log, math.exp |
Tested on Workplace for Android version 362.0.0.29.109. This approach might work in other Facebook/Meta applications. Thank you Imre Rad for helping me analyze the binary.
The Workplace Android app uses the Fizz open source TLS-1.3 library to communicate with the backend APIs. This library is written in C++, and is compiled to native code. It is running as a native library attached to the Android app.
The certificate verification is implemented in fizz/client/ClientProtocol.cpp, on line 1944.
The easiest way to bypass this check is to patch the if (state.verifier()) { check on line 1942.
| import os | |
| import re | |
| import urllib.request | |
| import logging | |
| import pickle | |
| import zipfile | |
| import ast | |
| import json | |
| import random | |
| import time |
| https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items | |
| https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/_apis/public/gallery |
{ "compilerOptions": { "types": ["node"], // @types are no longer auto-discovered (see §1.6)